I am, hands down,
my harshest critic.
None of my stories
are good enough for me.
I see every error,
every scene that could be improved.

I suspect you’re
your harshest critic also.
Business builders tend to be
this way.

If that’s true,
you need the equivalent
of an editor,
someone you trust,
someone who has your best interest
at heart,
someone who knows what your prospects
will want,
to tell you,
‘This is good enough.’

Find this person.
Listen to this person.
When she is happy,
ignore your inner critic,
and release your product
into the wild.

“…there has never been
a perfect leader.
There has never been
a flawless president.
There are always weaknesses,
foibles and scandals.
It takes more than a hundred years
before the patina sets in,
and even then,
most great leaders throughout history
had defects that would cause them
to wither under today’s profit-minded,
scandal-focused media.”

You won’t be a perfect leader
but you CAN be a great one.
You can make a difference.
You can change the world.

Business builders,
like you and I,
are either
super busy in December
because our customers are buying
during that month
or business is super slow
because our customers aren’t buying
and partners are on vacation.

If you’re super busy during December,
it makes sense to work hard
in November,
complete some of the projects
that don’t have to wait
until next month.
That will make
December less hectic.

If business is super slow during December,
it also makes sense
to work hard in November,
clear as much of next month’s workload
as possible
and have a truly relaxing December.

As we near
the end of the year,
many of us
are planning
new product/service releases
for 2017.

We should also consider
whether or not
we wish to retire older products/services.

Perhaps when we first started
our businesses,
we offered quite a few different products/services,
not knowing which one
would interest prospects
or ourselves.

Now, months or years later,
we have found our niche
and some of these offerings
don’t fit into that niche.
They’re distracting,
send a confusing message
to prospects.
Consider retiring these offerings.

Maybe you’ve updated
the product/service.
Consider retiring
the old product/service.

I’m very fortunate
that one of my series
has attracted quite a few fans.
That popularity means
readers are writing fanfic.
They’re writing their own stories
about my characters.

It is extremely challenging
to hear about my characters
doing or saying or feeling things
I know they wouldn’t.

But I have to allow that
to happen.
These fans bought my books
and are now playing with my characters.
I didn’t intend for them
to write their own stories
for their personal use
but they have that right.
They aren’t hurting anyone else.
I have to let my product go.

Odds are…
right now,
someone is using your product
in a way
you’re rather she/he not use it.

Today is Remembrance Day
in Canada.
One of the Remembrance Day exercises
my primary school teachers
would always give us
was to research our own family history
and share a story about a war,
any war,
with the class.

What this did
was make the event personal.
The hero of the story
wasn’t a stranger.
It was our mom,
our grandpa,
our great grandmom.

We cared about these relatives
and we paid special attention
to the stories others told
and the lessons taught
knowing that might have been
what these relatives endured.

This is what
great marketers do
with their product/service stories.
They make
the stories personal.
They make
us feel.